As social distancing, shuttered theaters, and self-quarantine become daily life, chances are you’ve turned to your plethora of streaming services to quell the boredom. But there’s more to life than Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+: several niche streaming services are offering free trials and discounts, giving you plenty of offbeat and hard-to-find content choices. Among them is horror specialist Shudder, British-focused Acorn TV, nonfiction purveyor DOX, and Sundance Now.

IndieWire has compiled a list of services currently offering discounts and free trials, along with some of their most notable offerings, and will update it with any new additions. Also included are other streaming services that regularly offer free trials.

Shudder, from AMC Networks, focuses on horror, thriller, and supernatural movies, and TV shows. Their film catalogue includes everything from classics like John Carpenter’s “The Fog” and “Halloween” to acclaimed titles like the Cannes Grand Prix-winning “Oldboy.” Its offerings are boosted by under-the-radar exclusives like “Tigers Are Not Afraid” from director Issa López, a magical-realism take on Mexico’s drug wars that made Guillermo del Toro’s Top 10 list in 2017.

It also offers a full slate of original and exclusive series and podcasts, including “Horror Noire: A History of Black Horror” and a companion podcast, plus picks from AMC’s TV channel including “Eli Roth’s History of Horror,” which features interviews with Stephen King, Quentin Tarantino, Jordan Peele, Jason Blum, Robert Englund, Jamie Lee Curtis, and more.

New titles are added monthly, and in March the service will add “I’m Still Here,” the Casey Affleck-directed mockumentary following Joaquin Phoenix’s fictional retirement from acting; and “Conan O’Brien Can’t Stop,” about O’Brien’s 2010 departure from “The Tonight Show.”

Anglophiles, this one is for you: Acorn TV offers mysteries, dramas, and comedies. Many are from the UK, but other titles hail from Ireland, Canada, Australia, and more. Among them are the BBC procedural “Line of Duty,” the highest-rated drama in Britain last year; “Doc Martin,” the medical comedy starring Martin Clunes in the title role; and the Swedish crime drama “Rebecka Martinsson.”

The service also offers original series, including the Irish period mystery “Dead Still” and British mystery “Agatha Raisin.” Its first feature, “Miss Fisher and the Crypt of Tears,” premieres March 23.

Founded on the ethos of the Sundance Film Festival, Sundance Now continues to show its indie bona fides with familiar titles and hidden gems. Among the offerings are “We Need to Talk About Kevin,” “Tangerine,” the Emily Dickinson biopic “A Quiet Passion,” and the Oscar-nominated “The Act of Killing.”

It’s also home to a slate of shows including Park Chan-wook’s “The Little Drummer Girl,” the BBC miniseries starring Florence Pugh, Michael Shannon, and Alexander Skarsgård. It recently leaned into the true-crime genre with podcast “The Truth About True Crime with Amanda Knox,” which offers a look at crimes chronicled in Sundance TV, and Sundance Now documentary series “Ministry of Evil: The Twisted Cult of Tony Alamo,” “Killing for Love,” “The Preppie Murder: Death In Central Park” and “No One Saw A Thing.”